Pavel suggested:
How about using fully qualified names instead?
I'm not very familiar with LDAP. I'm not sure what that would actually look
like.
What we have now is where users login to a terminal using their number. However with web
based logins they do use their email address.
I'd have to check tomorrow in the LDAP and check what a fully qualified name actually
is.
Mike
________________________________________
From: Pavel Březina <pbrezina(a)redhat.com>
Sent: Tuesday, March 10, 2020 11:33 PM
To: End-user discussions about the System Security Services Daemon; Michael Lake
Subject: Re: [SSSD-users] Can I map an LDAP value of 123456 to a user name of u123456 ?
On 3/10/20 5:11 AM, Michael Lake wrote:
Hi all
I am currently authenticating users with Centos 6 and sssd to an LDAP
server. I'll be moving to a Centos 8 so have setup sssd to authenticate
to the LDAP server on my test Centos 8 box. However, our users in our
LDAP only contains all numeric identifiers for users. Centos 8 no longer
accepts all numeric user names and group names
Currently my sssd.conf contains:
ldap_user_uid_number = uid
ldap_user_gid_number = uid
override_homedir = /homes/%u
Our LDAP server contains "uid" values for users like "123456"
I'll still be able to use the LDAP "uid" for UNIX uid and gid but what
I would like to be able to do is have the user name (and group name)
created by prefixing the LDAP "uid" values with a literal "u" to
make
them POSIX compliant.
Hence a user 123456 with "uid" of 123456 in LDAP can login and end up
with a username of "u123456".
I can't see a way to do that with a simple template in the "man
ssd.conf"
How about using fully qualified names instead?
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